Wood v. Boylan

19 F.2d 48, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2178
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 1927
DocketNo. 7538
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 48 (Wood v. Boylan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Boylan, 19 F.2d 48, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2178 (8th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

STONE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree declaring infringement of a patent.

The patent in suit is No. 1,326,908, issued to Samuel H. Boylan on January 6, 1920. Appellant made a device in accordance with a patent No. 1,484,695, issued to Charles E. Wood on February 26,1924. The master narrowly confined the claims of the Boylan patent and, as thus construed, found no infringement of that patent. Upon review, the court heard further evidence and, somewhat broadening the construction of the Boylan patent, found infringement thereof.

Estoppel, pleaded in the answer, is waived here. The validity of the Boylan patent is conceded. The contest is over the construction to be given to the claims of the Boylan patent. If the master is correct in his conception of the scope of that patent, there is no infringement. If the court is right in his conception thereof, there is infringement.

The device is purposed to separate pieces or particles of crushed zinc and lead ore bearing rock from a mass (called “pulp”) carried by water so that those of a similar size will he retained and thus classified. This is accomplished by placing the device in the path of a stream of water carrying the crushed ore so that the action of the water as it passes within and out of the device deposits therein pieces of the desired size, carrying the remainder beyond. The deviee is a suspended inverted metal cone with an outlet at the bottom controlled by a valve which is operated automatically by the weight of the contents. A clear statement of this purpose and its place in the process of separating ore from waste is contained in the report of the master and is as follows:

“The fundamental purpose of lead and zinc mills is to separate the lead and zinc mineral from the barren rock or waste. To do this, the mineral-bearing earth, called ore, is passed through crushers and ■ rolls until broken fine enough to pass through a screen of a certain size. It is then put on jigs which separate or classify the solid particles according to their specific gravity by pulsating water through the stream of pulp. This action causes the heavy minerals or lead and zinc to settle into a compartment from which they are drawn off, while the lighter particles or waste rock is carried off at’the top. The jigs are arranged successively, the first or rougher jig, making a concentrate of the lead and zinc mixed with some waste rock, and a tailing product supposedly free from mineral which goes to a waste pile. The concentrate goes to another jig called the cleaner jig, which in turn produces the lead and zine minerals free from waste material and a tailing product carrying more or less mineral. This tailing is ground finer to free the mineral from the waste and goes to a third jig which makes clean concentrate, and tailings still carrying some mineral. These tailings are then ground still finer and placed on concentrating tables. These tables are machines designed to concentrate finer material than is practical to handle on the jigs. They produce clean concentrate and tailings which go to the waste pile.
“In some mills the very fine slimes are removed at various stages in the process and treated with the oil floatation process. This process is particularly adapted to handle finer sixes than either the jigs or tables.
“In this process the ore is mixed with a considerable quantity of water and forms a pulp of water, mineral and waste and particles of sizes varying from impalpable dust called slime, to the largest size that will pass through the screen. The large amount of water and the extremely fine particles in this pulp are detrimental to some of the operations in the mill. A means of separating this fine material and the volume of water from the main portion of the material to be treated on the various machines was needed. Originally screens of various kinds were used, as also were boxes provided with an opening [50]*50in the bottom and an overflow spout at the top, into which the pulp was delivered. The coarser particles would settle and be drawn off with some water through the opening in the bottom, while the remainder of the water would overflow at the top carrying with it fine particles which would not settle. The screens were expensive to keep up and inefficient in separating the very fine sizes. The settling boxes were inefficient in removing all the water. For this purpose automatic cones found their field of use. They are used ahead of the jigs and also at the end of the jigs or any jSlace where it is desired to separate the coarser sized sand or mineral from the finer sizes and the greater part of the water.
“Machines of this type operate' on the physical principle that.the rate at which any particle will settle in water depends on its size and specific gravity, the coarser it is and the greater its specific gravity, the faster it will settle. For this purpose, only the size need be considered. These machines all have a cone or hopper which forms a receptacle in which this settling takes place. When the pulp is delivered into this receptacle, the coarser particles settle quickly and the finer particles, which do not settle so quickly, overflow with the water through the space provided. If the discharge of the coarser particles is restricted, it is readily seen that they will build up a bed in the bottom of the receptacle, thus increasing the weight of the total contents. If mechanism is applied to regulate the weight of the contents of this receptacle, it can be readily seen that this will regulate the depth of the coarser particles. This bed prevents the water from escaping with the coarser material to a very large degree, thus delivering this product almost entirely dewatered. When the depth of the bed is so great that only a shallow crater is left above it, the water introduced causes a more violent agitation and overflows more quickly, thus carrying out coarser sand than if the sand bed was more shallow and the crater deeper.
“Automatic maintenance of the relation between crater and bed will produce a uniform separation of the said particles according to their size, and this, together with the dewatering of the ore, is the purpose accomplished by such machines as plaintiff’s and defendant’s.”

The master has well described the device of plaintiff and its operation as follows:

“It consists of either a cone, or oblong inverted pyramid suspended from a single point by four rods anchored to the cone by rings. These rods are anchored at the upper end to a single fulcrum lever. From the long end of this lever there extends a bar diagonally downward to the bottom of the cone, which bar indirectly actuates a valve at the bottom of the cone or hopper. Further out on the long end of the lever is suspended a bucket into which is thrown iron or other heavy material, thus serving as a counter balance weight to the cone filled with water and mineral-bearing earth.”
“The ore mixed with water, is introduced at the top of the cone. The coarser particles settle to the bottom and form a bed of a depth determined by the amount of counter balance weight.
“The finer particles overflow with the water. When the weight in the cone becomes great enough, it descends, thus raising the counter balance weight at the end of the-lever and opening the valve. This permits the heavier and coarser materials to escape through the valve while the water carrying the finer particles of the mineral escapes through an outlet opening near the top of the cone.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 48, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-boylan-ca8-1927.